Boroughs v. Peterson

114 P. 758, 39 Utah 11, 1911 Utah LEXIS 26
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1911
DocketNo. 2153
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 114 P. 758 (Boroughs v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boroughs v. Peterson, 114 P. 758, 39 Utah 11, 1911 Utah LEXIS 26 (Utah 1911).

Opinions

FRICK, C. J.

Respondent brought this action against the appellants to recover the sum of two thousand dollars as for money had and received by them for her use and benefit. The material allegations in the complaint, in substance, are: That the appellants were conducting a gambling house in Ogden City, Utah; that respondent on the 15th day of April, 1909, was the owner of two thousand dollars in cash; that between the date aforesaid and the 13th day of May, 1909, respondent’s husband took said money from her possession without her consent, and, contrary to her directions or instructions, he lost the same by gambling in the gambling house of appellants, and that they by that means and in that manner obtained and received said two thousand dollars “for the use and benefit of the plaintiff herein;” that before bringing the action respondent demanded said money from appellants,, which they refused to return to her. The answer, in legal effect, amounts to a general denial. A trial to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of respondent for the sum of five hundred dollars. The appellants present the record to this court on appeal.

The principal error assigned is that the verdict is not supported by sufficient evidence. The controlling facts developed at the trial are substantially as follows: Respondent on the 11th day of April, 1909, married one Erank Boroughs. Respondent and her husband prior to their marriage came from the state of North Carolina and were married at Ogden City, Utah. After respondent came to Ogden, she received about five hundred dollars from home, a part of which she received as the proceeds of the sale of property which she had sold, and the remainder was a gift. Fifteen hundred dollars she says her husband gave her about three [15]*15days after they were married. When she was asked with regard to this gift and what was said by her husband with respect thereto, her answer was: “Not other than to take care of it — gave it to me that I might invest it in any way that I wished. ... We had a house in view. ... We thought we would invest the money in and live in it.” When she was further asked to state how her husband “came to give you that money,” she said: “Well, not other than what is a man’s is his wife’s.” She further said that she kept all of the money aforesaid in her trunk in the room where she and her husband lived; that both she and he had access at all times to the trunk, and that they were the only persons who did have access thereto; that during the forepart of the month of May, 1909, a large portion of the money was taken from the trunk in sums from two hundred and fifty dollars to five hundred dollars at a time; that on the 12th day of May five hundred dollars remained, and that that sum was-taken by her husband on that day; that the money was all gambled against her will. It further appeared that her husband was seen gambling in áppellant’s gambling house at least twice. On one occasion he was seen to lose eight twenty dollar bills, amounting to one hundred and sixty dollars, and he was seen playing a game denominated faro, which, it seems, was played by first obtaining what by the witness are called chips. These chips, it seems, were of different denominations or valuesl The witness said that respondent’s-husband had in his possession about one hundred and fifty dollars worth of those chips, but whether he bought them with money, whether he had won any or all of them, or whether he finally was winner or loser, the witness did not know. This was practically all the competent evidence with respect to the gambling of the husband except the inference-that he lost the money in that way at some time and at someplace because he had the money at one time and had parted with it in some way by the 13th of May aforesaid. Counsel for respondent, however, places strong reliance upon what he-insists amounted to an admission by one of appellants. The alleged admission came about as follows: When all the-[16]*16money was gone, it seems respondent’s husband told her he had lost it at' gambling. She then called to see Mr. Peterson, one of the appellants, and she says she told him that: “My husband, Prank Boroughs, gambled two thousand dollars in your gambling house, and I am left without anything at all.” She further told Peterson of her destitute condition, that she was indebted to various persons, and asked him to “give me just enough to go to my mother, who lives in South Carolina, and to pay those just debts which I owe.” She further says that she told Peterson that two thousand dollars was the amount lost by her husband, “but, if he would give me one thousand dollars, I would never say another word and he would hear no more from me. . . . He told me he would study over it, and see what he could do about it.” She said she gave Peterson three days to think it over. On the third day she called Peterson up over the ‘phone, and her testimony proceeds as follows: “He told me that he couldn’t afford — that that was the way they made their living, and he couldn’t afford to listen to the whims of a woman.” She said that she continued pleading with him, “and, he said if it was my money, I should have taken care of it before that hour, and that he couldn’t afford to give it back.” We remark that the evidence, if believed by the jury, was sufficient to sustain a finding that at one time respondent had in her possession the sum of two thousand dollars. In view of the verdict, however, the jury must have come to the conclusion that her husband had not made the gife of one thousand, five hundred dollars to her, but that he still regarded it as his own money.

While there is considerable evidence on behalf of appellants which is flatly contradictory of respondent’s statements, yet it is not deemed necessary to notice 1 any of it on this appeal, since, for the purpose of the question before us, we must assume what respondent said was true.

The principal assignment of error insisted on by appellants, stated in counsel’s own language, is: “That the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict, and that it is [17]*17against law.” Tbis assignment is -supported by an attempt to specify the particulars wherein it is claimed the evidence is insufficient. Counsel for respondent, however, insits that the specifications are wholly insufficient, and that they do not conform to rule twenty-six of the rules of practice of this court. Counsel therefore insists that we must disregard the assignment. We remark that, while the particulars wherein the evidence is insufficient are perhaps not stated as fully and as specifically as they could'have been, yet, in view of the whole record, we think the specifications are sufficient, and that they substantially comply with the rule, aforesaid. The question to be decided, therefore, is: Is the evidence sufficient to support the verdict of the jury ?

In the absence of a statute, probably the only right of action respondent had was to sue appellants as she did, namely, for money had and received by them for her use and benefit. To sustain this action, however, a plaintff must show that “there has been an actual receipt of money by the defendant or something equivalent to it.” (Abbott’s 2 Trial Evidence [2 Ed.], p. 337.) In addition to this, “the evidence must tend to show a definite sum, or certain data from which by arithmetical calculation the jury may ascertain the sum.” (Id., p.

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Bluebook (online)
114 P. 758, 39 Utah 11, 1911 Utah LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boroughs-v-peterson-utah-1911.